Canada to Implement Northern B.C. Tanker Ban This Year -Report
TORONTO, Nov 4 (Reuters) – Canada’s Liberal government will this year
deliver on its pledge for a moratorium on oil tanker traffic along the
northern coast of British Columbia, CBC News reported on Friday.
Transport Minister Marc Garneau confirmed the plan in an interview with CBC Radio’s “The House,” the broadcaster said on its website.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last year instructed Garneau to formalize the ban on oil tanker traffic, effectively slamming the door on a pipeline project that was already facing massive development hurdles.
The ban is one of several obstacles to the building of Enbridge Inc’s Northern Gateway pipeline, which would carry oil sands crude from near Edmonton, Alberta, to a deepwater port at Kitimat, British Columbia, for export to Asian markets.
Separately, Garneau said the government was looking at a recommendation that it privatize airports, but that “it’s not a front-burner exercise” and people should not jump to any conclusions, CBC said.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Hodgson; Editing by Leslie Adler)
(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2016.
Transport Minister Marc Garneau confirmed the plan in an interview with CBC Radio’s “The House,” the broadcaster said on its website.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau last year instructed Garneau to formalize the ban on oil tanker traffic, effectively slamming the door on a pipeline project that was already facing massive development hurdles.
The ban is one of several obstacles to the building of Enbridge Inc’s Northern Gateway pipeline, which would carry oil sands crude from near Edmonton, Alberta, to a deepwater port at Kitimat, British Columbia, for export to Asian markets.
Separately, Garneau said the government was looking at a recommendation that it privatize airports, but that “it’s not a front-burner exercise” and people should not jump to any conclusions, CBC said.
(Reporting by Jeffrey Hodgson; Editing by Leslie Adler)
(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2016.
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